Changing the color of text or shapes in your C program can help them pop when the user runs your program. Changing the color of your text and objects is a fairly straightforward process, and the necessary functions are included in the standard libraries. You can change the color of anything you output on the screen.

Steps

Part 1

Changing Output Text Color

1

Include the Standard Input and Output library. This common library allows you to change the color that the text output displays. Add the following code to the top of your program:[1]

#include<stdio.h>

2

Include the Console Input and Output library. This will make it easier to capture keyboard input from the user. Add the library below the stdio.h library:

[[Image:Get Color in C Program Step 1 Version 3.jpg|center]]#include<stdio.h>[[Image:Get Color in C Program Step 2 Version 3.jpg|center]]#include<conio.h>

3

Use the textcolor function to define what color you want to use for text. You can use this function to vary the text colors of your output. Colors must be written in all caps, or expressed as a numeral:

[[Image:Get Color in C Program Step 3 Version 3.jpg|center]]#include<stdio.h>[[Image:Get Color in C Program Step 4 Version 2.jpg|center]]#include<conio.h>
main(){
textcolor(RED);// You could type "4" instead of "RED", but it is not as readable}

Color

Numerical Value

BLACK

0

BLUE

1

GREEN

2

CYAN

3

RED

4

MAGENTA

5

BROWN

6

LIGHTGRAY

7

DARKGRAY

8

LIGHTBLUE

9

LIGHTGREEN

10

LIGHTCYAN

11

LIGHTRED

12

LIGHTMAGENTA

13

YELLOW

14

WHITE

15

There are more colors than this. The colors available depend on the installed graphics drivers and current mode. Colors must be written in all caps.[2]

4

Add output text and finish the program. Include a cprintf function to display some text in your new color. Use a getch function at the end to close the program when the user presses a key.

[[Image:Get Color in C Program Step 5 Version 2.jpg|center]]#include<stdio.h>[[Image:Get Color in C Program Step 6 Version 2.jpg|center]]#include<conio.h>
main(){
textcolor(RED);// You could type "4" instead of "RED", but it is not as readable
cprintf("Hello, World!");getch();return0;}

Part 2

Changing Drawing Color

1

Include the graphics library. The C graphics library allows you to draw objects, as well as adjust their color. You can get access to the graphics library by including it at the top of your program:

#include<graphics.h>

2

Include the Console Input and Output library. You can use this library to easily capture a user's input. Add the library below the graphics.h library:

[[Image:Get Color in C Program Step 8 Version 2.jpg|center]]#include<graphics.h>[[Image:Get Color in C Program Step 9 Version 2.jpg|center]]#include<conio.h>

3

Initialize the variables for the graphics driver and mode. You'll need to do this before you begin drawing objects, so that the program has access to the system graphics drivers. This will create an area on the screen that the object will be drawn on.

[[Image:Get Color in C Program Step 10 Version 2.jpg|center]]#include<graphics.h>#include<conio.h>
main(){int gd = DETECT, gm;
initgraph(&gd,&gm,"C:\\TC\\BGI");// Change this to the path of your compiler}

4

Set the color of the object you want to draw. Before coding in an object, use the setcolor function to define the color of the object you are about to draw:[3]

#include<graphics.h>#include<conio.h>
main(){int gd = DETECT, gm;
initgraph(&gd,&gm,"C:\\TC\\BGI");
setcolor(BLUE);// You can enter "1" instead of "BLUE" to get the same color, but this is not as readable}

5

Draw an object of your choice. For this example, you'll be drawing a rectangle using the rectangle function. You can use any of the graphics.h drawing tools to draw in the color that you set.